Description
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- About the Author
- Contents at a Glance
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- About This Book
- Conventions Used in This Book
- What You’re Not to Read
- Foolish Assumptions
- How This Book Is Organized
- Icons Used in This Book
- Where to Go from Here
- Part I: Getting Started with Business Models
- Chapter 1: What Is a Business Model and Why Does It Matter?
- History of Business Models
- Business Models Are a Hot Topic
- Who Needs a Business Model?
- Value of a Business Model
- Future of Business Models
- Chapter 2: Business Models Defined
- Following the Recipe for a Successful Business Model
- Comparing Business Models to Business Plans
- Chapter 3: Business Models Come in Many Different Forms
- Common Aspects of All Business Models
- Business Models in Their Simplest Form
- Examples of Business Models
- Chapter 4: Your Business Success Depends Upon Your Business Model
- Trying (And Failing) to Succeed without a Superior Business Model
- Equating Hard Work with Results — As Long As the Business Model is Solid
- Experimenting Your Way to a Great Model
- Part II: Creating a Winning Business Model
- Chapter 5: Using Tools to Design Your Business Model
- Examining Traditional Business Model Design Methods
- Discovering Problems with Traditional Methods
- Designing a Business Model by Using a Structured Process
- Chapter 6: Finding the Most Attractive Markets to Create a Powerful Offering
- Gauging the Target Market
- Determining Industry Attractiveness
- Looking for Niche Attractiveness
- Checking Out Customer Attractiveness
- Finding Your Place on the Industry Value Chain
- Chapter 7: Completing Your Offering with a Unique Value Proposition
- Building a Unique Value Proposition
- Comparing a Unique Selling Proposition to a Unique Value Proposition
- Maximizing Product Potential
- Building Marketability
- Creating a Powerful Brand
- Chapter 8: Making Money with Your Business Model
- Building a Profitable Revenue Model
- Assessing Your Competition
- Generating Enough Total Margin Dollars
- Creating a Meaningful Cost Advantage
- Creating Valuable Recurring Revenue Streams
- Avoiding Pitfalls
- Chapter 9: Monetization through Sales Performance
- Closing the Deal
- Marketing Beats Sales
- Creating a Proven and Repeatable Sales Process
- Chapter 10: Making Your Business Model Last
- Creating Meaningful Competitive Advantage
- Sustaining Your Competitive Advantage
- Gauging Competitive Advantage by Using Porter’s Five Forces Model
- Chapter 11: Sustaining Your Business Model: Innovating and Avoiding Pitfalls
- Maintaining the Strength of Your Model with Innovation
- Avoiding Pitfalls
- Chapter 12: Cashing In
- Considering the Next Owner: The Best Business Models Have Transferability
- Selling Your Business Isn’t the Only Exit Strategy
- Improving Your Ability to Gracefully Exit
- Chapter 13: Analyzing Your Business Model
- Comparing Live Business Models and Theoretical Business Models
- Using the Business Model Framework
- Scoring Your Business Model
- Part III: Dealing with Change
- Chapter 14: Knowing that All Business Models Erode
- There’s No Shame in a Weakening Business Model
- Be Proactive and Be Rewarded
- Chapter 15: Looking for Signs that Your Business Model Is Weakening
- Decreasing Margins
- Prolonged Minimal Profits
- Flat Sales Trend
- General Dissatisfaction
- Chapter 16: Detecting Hidden Problems and Adapting before It’s Too Late
- Fixing Your Business Model to Make Other Problems Disappear
- Examining Some Disguised Issues
- Ignoring Business Model Issues Only Extends the Pain
- Considering the Consequences of Not Adapting
- Part IV: Business Model Innovation
- Chapter 17: Figuring Out Where to Begin the Innovation Process
- Adjusting Your Old Model Rarely Works
- Predicting the Future
- Failure Can Be Your Friend (As Long As It’s Cheap and Fast)
- Chapter 18: Starting the Innovation Process
- Comparing Marginal Innovation and Quantum Innovation
- Discovering the Correlation between Craziness and Innovative Genius
- Keeping the Creative Process on Track
- Chapter 19: Using Disruptive Innovation
- The Disruptive Innovator Usually Wins
- Most of Your Existing Model Works Fine: Don’t Throw Out the Baby with the Bathwater
- Chapter 20: Crowdsourcing as Advanced Business Model Innovation
- Crowdsourcing Is Here to Stay
- Ten Things You May Not Know Were Crowdsourced
- Your Business Model Can Benefit from Crowdsourcing
- Potential Downsides of Crowdsourcing
- Chapter 21: Utilizing Virtualized Sales Processes
- Understanding How the Internet Changed the World of Sales
- Considering the Benefits of Sales Virtualization
- Examining the Foundations of a Virtualized Sales Process
- Walking through the Sales Virtualization Process
- Chapter 22: Profiting from the Dynamics of Insurance
- Defining Insurance
- Understanding the Core of Insurance Profitability
- Denying Your Customers Insurance Is Costing You
- Charging Insurance in Creative Ways
- Worksheet: Creating an Insurance Program
- Part V: The Part of Tens
- Chapter 23: Ten Terrific Business Models
- Build Once, Sell Many
- Create a Must-Have Brand
- Get Customers to Create Goods for Free
- True Competitive Advantage as the Low-Cost Provider
- Extraction of Natural Resources
- Valued Intellectual Property with Legal or Practical Protection
- Technological Destruction of Existing Model
- Gold Plating the Current Gold Standard
- Playing to Customers’ Ever-Increasing Sense of Self
- Ultra Niche Player
- Chapter 24: Ten Signs You May Have an Issue with Your Business Model
- You Have a Strong Desire to Sell the Business
- You’re Underpaid
- You Need to Constantly Borrow Funds in Order to Grow
- You Feel You Need to Hire Sales Superstars to Fix Your Sales Issues
- You’re Unbankable
- Your Margins Are Lower Than Your Competitors’ Margins
- You Put Up with Lousy Customers Instead of Firing Them
- You Feel There is No One to Whom You Can Delegate
- Your Best Performers Often Leave for Better Opportunities
- Your Customer Base is Stagnant or Declining
- Chapter 25: Applying Ten Sources of Business Model Innovation
- Business Books
- Competitors
- Consultants
- Great Companies Outside Your Industry
- The Crystal Ball
- Employees
- Products or Services You Buy
- Travel to Other Countries or Hotspots
- Daydreaming
- Salespeople
- Chapter 26: Ten Things a Venture Capitalist Never Wants to Hear About Your Business
- I’ll Figure Out How to Monetize This Later
- It’s Kind of Like Groupon, Except . . .
- I Used to Work for a Company That Did the Same Thing
- My Business Plan Calls For . . .
- I’ll Make It on the Back End
- Everybody Needs This Product
- I’ll Make it Up In Volume
- We Need to Get Only One Percent of the Market
- I’ve Been Working on This Big Sale for a Year and It Will Close at Any Time
- What’s a Business Model?
- Index
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